Tech

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak: iPhone X is the first iPhone I won't buy on 'day one'

Key Points
  • "I'm happy with my iPhone 8 — which is the same as the iPhone 7, which is the same as the iPhone 6, to me," Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak said.
  • The iPhone X, unveiled in September, features an edge-to-edge 5.8-inch bright, sharp display, with a smaller chassis than the iPhone 8 Plus. It also has facial recognition.
  • But Wozniak said he was skeptical that the Face ID feature would work the way it is supposed to.
Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak says he won't be upgrading to the iPhone X right away
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Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak says he won't be upgrading to the iPhone X right away

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak said he's not in a hurry to buy the next iPhone — even though he usually rushes out to upgrade on opening day.

"I'd rather wait and watch that one. I'm happy with my iPhone 8 — which is the same as the iPhone 7, which is the same as the iPhone 6, to me," Wozniak said, speaking from the sidelines of the Money 20/20 conference. "For some reason, the iPhone X is going to be the first iPhone I didn't — on day one — upgrade to. But my wife will, so I'll be close enough to see it."

Wozniak — who is known to carry several new phones at once — made the remarks just ahead of preorder sales, which open on Oct. 27.

Steve Wozniak speaking at eMerge in Miami on June 12, 2017.
David A. Grogan | CNBC

For more than a year before it was released, the iPhone X was hailed as a revolutionary new form factor that could spark a "super cycle" of sales. The phone, unveiled in September, features an edge-to-edge 5.8-inch bright, sharp display, with a smaller chassis than the iPhone 8 Plus. It also has facial recognition.

But Wozniak also said he was skeptical that the Face ID feature would work the way it is supposed to.

Wozniak isn't the only onlooker who's uncertain about the new handset. Because the iPhone 8 and the iPhone X were not released at the same time this year, some analysts have struggled to get a handle on how well the phones will sell.

Surveys show that a high percentage of consumers plan to purchase a new iPhone in the next three months but that the iPhone 8 series is accounting for a smaller share of sales than the new iPhones this time last year, according to UBS analyst Steven Milunovich.

"This softness could be good or bad depending on whether users are waiting on the iPhone X," Milunovich wrote in a Monday note.

Venture capitalist Gene Munster noted that Google searches for "iPhone" seem to have declined 10 percent year over year. But Munster said his firm's surveys show "positive data points for Apple."

"The release of the iPhone 8 was underwhelming compared to past iPhone launches, but this is not bad news for Apple. This year's iPhone cycle will have its units and revenues split between the iPhone 8 and the iPhone X," Munster wrote. "Historically about half of the iPhones purchased in a given year are the most recently released model. This bodes well for iPhone revenue growth."

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